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result(s) for
"van Kooten, Harmke A."
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Home-Based Infusion of Alglucosidase Alfa Can Safely be Implemented in Adults with Late-Onset Pompe Disease: Lessons Learned from 18,380 Infusions
by
Kruijshaar, Michelle E.
,
van der Beek, Nadine A. M. E.
,
Ditters, Imke A. M.
in
Antibodies
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2023
Background
Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with alglucosidase alfa is the treatment for patients with Pompe disease, a hereditary metabolic myopathy. Home-based ERT is unavailable in many countries because of the boxed warning alglucosidase alfa received due to the risk of infusion-associated reactions (IARs). Since 2008, home infusions have been provided in The Netherlands.
Objectives
This study aimed to provide an overview of our experience with home-based infusions with alglucosidase alfa in adult Pompe patients, focusing on safety, including management of IARs.
Method
We analysed infusion data and IARs from adult patients starting ERT between 1999 and 2018. ERT was initially given in the hospital during the first year. Patients were eligible for home treatment if they were without IARs for multiple consecutive infusions and if a trained home nurse, with on-call back-up by a doctor, was available. The healthcare providers graded IARs.
Results
We analysed data on 18,380 infusions with alglucosidase alfa in 121 adult patients; 4961 infusions (27.0%) were given in hospital and 13,419 (73.0%) were given at home. IARs occurred in 144 (2.9%) hospital infusions and 113 (0.8%) home infusions; 115 (79.9% of 144) IARs in hospital and 104 (92.0% of 113) IARs at home were mild, 25 IARs (17.4%) in hospital and 8 IARs (7.1%) at home were moderate, and very few severe IARs occurred (4 IARs in hospital [2.8%] and 1 IAR at home [0.9%]). Only one IAR in the home situation required immediate clinical evaluation in the hospital.
Conclusion
Given the small numbers of IARs that occurred with the home infusions, of which only one was severe, we conclude that alglucosidase alfa can be administered safely in the home situation, provided the appropriate infrastructure is present.
Journal Article
Chest MRI to diagnose early diaphragmatic weakness in Pompe disease
by
Harlaar, Laurike
,
van der Beek, Nadine A. M. E.
,
van Doorn, Pieter A.
in
Chest
,
Complications and side effects
,
Diagnosis
2021
Background
In Pompe disease, an inherited metabolic muscle disorder, severe diaphragmatic weakness often occurs. Enzyme replacement treatment is relatively ineffective for respiratory function, possibly because of irreversible damage to the diaphragm early in the disease course. Mildly impaired diaphragmatic function may not be recognized by spirometry, which is commonly used to study respiratory function. In this cross-sectional study, we aimed to identify early signs of diaphragmatic weakness in Pompe patients using chest MRI.
Methods
Pompe patients covering the spectrum of disease severity, and sex and age matched healthy controls were prospectively included and studied using spirometry-controlled sagittal MR images of both mid-hemidiaphragms during forced inspiration. The motions of the diaphragm and thoracic wall were evaluated by measuring thoracic cranial-caudal and anterior–posterior distance ratios between inspiration and expiration. The diaphragm shape was evaluated by measuring the height of the diaphragm curvature. We used multiple linear regression analysis to compare different groups.
Results
We included 22 Pompe patients with decreased spirometry results (forced vital capacity in supine position < 80% predicted); 13 Pompe patients with normal spirometry results (forced vital capacity in supine position ≥ 80% predicted) and 18 healthy controls. The mean cranial-caudal ratio was only 1.32 in patients with decreased spirometry results, 1.60 in patients with normal spirometry results and 1.72 in healthy controls (
p
< 0.001). Anterior–posterior ratios showed no significant differences. The mean height ratios of the diaphragm curvature were 1.41 in patients with decreased spirometry results, 1.08 in patients with normal spirometry results and 0.82 in healthy controls (
p
= 0.001), indicating an increased curvature of the diaphragm during inspiration in Pompe patients.
Conclusions
Even in early-stage Pompe disease, when spirometry results are still within normal range, the motion of the diaphragm is already reduced and the shape is more curved during inspiration. MRI can be used to detect early signs of diaphragmatic weakness in patients with Pompe disease, which might help to select patients for early intervention to prevent possible irreversible damage to the diaphragm.
Journal Article
Antibodies against recombinant human alpha-glucosidase do not seem to affect clinical outcome in childhood onset Pompe disease
by
van der Beek, Nadine A. M. E.
,
van Doorn, Pieter A.
,
Ditters, Imke A. M.
in
alpha-Glucosidases - therapeutic use
,
Antibodies
,
Antibodies - therapeutic use
2022
Background
Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with recombinant human alpha-glucosidase (rhGAA, alglucosidase alfa) has improved survival, motor outcomes, daily life activity and quality of life in Pompe patients. However, ERT in Pompe disease often induces formation of antibodies, which may reduce the efficacy of treatment and can lead to adverse events. In this study antibody formation and their effect on clinical outcome in patients with childhood onset Pompe disease treated with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with recombinant human alpha-glucosidase (rhGAA) are analyzed.
Methods
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to determine anti-rhGAA antibody titers at predefined time points. The effect of antibodies on rhGAA activity (neutralizing effects) was measured in vitro. Clinical effects were evaluated by assessing muscle strength (MRC score) and function (QMFT-score), pulmonary function and infusion associated reactions (IARs).
Results
Twenty-two patients were included (age at start ERT 1.1–16.4 years, median treatment duration 12.4 years). Peak antibody titers were low (< 1:1250) in 9%, intermediate (1:1250–1:31,250) in 68% and high (≥ 1:31250) in 23% of patients; three patients (14%) had more than one titer of ≥ 1:31,250. Four patients (18%) experienced IARs; two patients from the high titer group had 86% of all IARs. Inhibition of intracellular GAA activity (58%) in vitro was found in one sample. The clinical course did not appear to be influenced by antibody titers.
Conclusions
Ninety-one percent of childhood onset Pompe patients developed anti-rhGAA antibodies (above background level), a minority of whom had high antibody titers at repeated time points, which do not seem to interfere with clinical outcome. High antibody titers may be associated with the occurrence of IARs. Although the majority of patients does not develop high titers; antibody titers should be determined in case of clinical deterioration.
Journal Article
Are Anti-rhGAA Antibodies a Determinant of Treatment Outcome in Adults with Late-Onset Pompe Disease? A Systematic Review
by
van der Beek, Nadine A. M. E.
,
Ditters, Imke A. M.
,
van den Hout, Johanna M. P.
in
Adult
,
Adults
,
alpha-Glucosidases - therapeutic use
2023
Background: Pompe disease is a lysosomal storage disease characterised by skeletal and respiratory muscle weakness. Since 2006, enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with alglucosidase alfa has been available. ERT significantly improves the prognosis of patients with Pompe disease. The effect of high antibody titres on treatment response in adults with late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) remains unclear but may contribute to interpatient variation. We therefore conducted a systematic review on this subject. Methods: A systematic search was performed in Embase, Medline Ovid, Web of Science, Psych Info Ovid, Cochrane (Clinical Trials only), and Google Scholar (random top-200). Articles were included if they involved adults with LOPD treated with alglucosidase alfa and mentioned anti-rhGAA antibodies or antibody titres. In addition, articles mentioning dosages different from the standard recommended dosage were included. Results: Our literature search retrieved 2562 publications, and 17 fulfilled our selection criteria, describing 443 cases. Seven publications reported on anti-rhGAA antibody titres on a group level, with the percentage of patients with a high titre as defined in the included articles ranging from 0–33%. Six publications reported on the effect of anti-rhGAA antibody titre on clinical course, and four found no correlation. Two studies reported a negative effect on treatment. The first study found a greater improvement in Medical Research Council (MRC) score in patients with no detectable antibody titre. In the second study, a patient discontinued ERT due to a declining neuromuscular state as a result of high anti-rhGAA antibody titres. Seven publications reported on 17 individual patients with a high antibody titre (range 1:12,800–1:3,906,250). In only two cases were high-sustained neutralising antibodies reported to interfere with treatment efficacy. Conclusions: No clear effect of anti-rhGAA IgG antibodies on treatment response could be established for the majority of LOPD patients with a high antibody titre. In a minority of patients, a clinical decline related to (possible) interference of anti-rhGAA antibodies was described.
Journal Article
MRI changes in diaphragmatic motion and curvature in Pompe disease over time
by
Harlaar, Laurike
,
van der Beek, Nadine A. M. E.
,
van Doorn, Pieter A.
in
Adult
,
Algorithms
,
Artificial neural networks
2022
Objectives
To evaluate changes in diaphragmatic function in Pompe disease using MRI over time, both during natural disease course and during treatment with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT).
Methods
In this prospective study, 30 adult Pompe patients and 10 healthy controls underwent pulmonary function tests and spirometry-controlled MRI twice, with an interval of 1 year. In the sagittal view of 3D gradient echo breath-hold acquisitions, diaphragmatic motion (cranial-caudal ratio between end-inspiration and end-expiration) and curvature (diaphragm height and area ratio) were calculated using a machine learning algorithm based on convolutional neural networks. Changes in outcomes after 1 year were compared between Pompe patients and healthy controls using the Mann-Whitney test.
Results
Pulmonary function outcomes and cranial-caudal ratio in Pompe patients did not change significantly over time compared to healthy controls. Diaphragm height ratio increased by 0.04 (−0.38 to 1.79) in Pompe patients compared to −0.02 (−0.18 to 0.25) in healthy controls (
p
= 0.02). An increased diaphragmatic curvature over time was observed in particular in untreated Pompe patients (
p
= 0.03), in those receiving ERT already for over 3 years (
p
= 0.03), and when severe diaphragmatic weakness was found on the initial MRI (
p
= 0.01); no progression was observed in Pompe patients who started ERT less than 3 years ago and in Pompe patients with mild diaphragmatic weakness on their initial MRI.
Conclusions
MRI enables to detect small changes in diaphragmatic curvature over 1-year time in Pompe patients. It also showed that once severe diaphragmatic weakness has occurred, improvement of diaphragmatic muscle function seems unlikely.
Key Points
•
Changes in diaphragmatic curvature in Pompe patients over time assessed with 3D MRI may serve as an outcome measure to evaluate the effect of treatment on diaphragmatic function
.
•
Diaphragmatic curvature showed a significant deterioration after 1 year in Pompe patients compared to healthy controls, but the curvature seems to remain stable over this period in patients who were treated with enzyme replacement therapy for less than 3 years, possibly indicating a positive effect of ERT
.
•
Improvement of diaphragmatic curvature over time is rarely seen in Pompe patients once diaphragmatic motion shows severe impairment (cranial-caudal inspiratory/expiratory ratio < 1.4)
.
Journal Article
Unfavorable cardiovascular risk profile without increased event prevalence in late-onset Pompe disease: an individually matched cohort study
It is unclear whether cardiovascular risk factors are more common or if cardiovascular disease occurs more frequently in adults with late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) than in the general population. We investigated the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors and cardiovascular events in adults with LOPD compared to an individually matched control cohort.
Adults with LOPD were individually matched to control subjects, with the same sex, smoking status, age (± 5 years) and BMI (± 5 kg/m
). Assessments included measurement of height, weight, waist-hip circumference, 30 min blood pressure measurement, electrocardiogram, and blood and urine laboratory analysis. Medical history of cardiovascular risk factors and events were collected via questionnaires and patient records.
Seventy-eight patients (median age 55.9 years, BMI 25.1 kg/m
) and 78 control subjects (median age 55.3 years, BMI 25.6 kg/m
) were included. Patients had a higher resting heart rate (76 vs. 66 BPM, p < 0.001), larger waist circumference (93 vs. 90 cm, p = 0.011) and waist-to-hip ratio (0.91 vs. 0.86, p = 0.005). A greater proportion of patients than controls had a history of hypertension (32% vs. 14%; p = 0.026). More patients than controls (19 vs. 9%) experienced a cardiovascular event in the past, but this difference was not statistically significant.
Patients with LOPD showed a less favorable cardiovascular risk profile compared to an individually matched control cohort. The prevalence of cardiovascular events did not significantly differ between the cohorts, although our study is likely underpowered to detect subtle differences due to the low number of events.
Journal Article
Improving outcome measures in late onset Pompe disease: Modified Rasch‐Built Pompe‐Specific Activity scale
2024
Background and purpose The Rasch‐Built Pompe‐Specific Activity (R‐PAct) scale is a patient‐reported outcome measure specifically designed to quantify the effects of Pompe disease on daily life activities, developed for use in Dutch‐ and English‐speaking countries. This study aimed to validate the R‐PAct for use in other countries. Methods Four other language versions (German, French, Italian, and Spanish) of the R‐PAct were created and distributed among Pompe patients (≥16 years old) in Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and Switzerland and pooled with data of newly diagnosed patients from Australia, Belgium, Canada, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the USA, and the UK and the original validation cohort (n = 186). The psychometric properties of the scale were assessed by exploratory factor analysis and Rasch analysis. Results Data for 520 patients were eligible for analysis. Exploratory factor analysis suggested that the items separated into two domains: Activities of Daily Living and Mobility. Both domains independently displayed adequate Rasch model measurement properties, following the removal of one item (\"Are you able to practice a sport?\") from the Mobility domain, and can be added together to form a \"higher order\" factor as well. Differential item functioning (DIF)‐by‐language assessment indicated DIF for several items; however, the impact of accounting for DIF was negligible. We recalibrated the nomogram (raw score interval‐level transformation) for the updated 17‐item R‐PAct scale. The minimal detectable change value was 13.85 for the overall R‐PAct. Conclusions After removing one item, the modified‐R‐PAct scale is a valid disease‐specific patient‐reported outcome measure for patients with Pompe disease across multiple countries.
Journal Article
The appropriateness of surveillance colonoscopy intervals after polypectomy/La pertinence de la surveillance des intervalles de coloscopie après une polypectomie
by
Nicolaas, Jerome Sint
,
Sadowski, Daniel
,
van Zanten, Sander J O Veldhuyzen
in
Colonoscopy
,
Gastroenterology
,
Physicians
2013
Journal Article